o the Ao the A | Forum

Topic location: Forum home » General » General Chat
123
123 May 26 '19
WASHINGTON -- Joe Pavelski isnt the United States oldest player at the World Cup of Hockey, nor does he have the most skill, size, experience or even the best beard. Swell Traveler Sale .He just has the C on his chest.Pavelski has only been an NHL captain for one season, but the leader of the San Jose Sharks was given the leadership role for the Americans at the World Cup, which begins Saturday in Toronto. Its not a distinction he takes lightly even if hes not quite sure why coaches and players chose him over the likes of 2014 Olympic captain Zach Parise, New York Rangers captain Ryan McDonagh and others.Ive got a lot of respect for all these guys, and a lot of guys could do the job, Pavelski said Tuesday. Our performance last year mightve helped and the success we had leading (San Jose deep) in the playoffs. Those little things might help.Everyone else knows, and the answer is simple. Pavelski plays the game the way the U.S. wants to play it. Committed, gritty hockey, with skill and a straightforward style for coach John Tortorella and his staff.Theres not a lot of fluff to him, Tortorella said. He just plays. Hes not on the outside (of the rink). Hes skilled. Hes in the blue (crease). He is a complete player, and thats probably one of the best compliments you can give a guy is the word `complete and he is that.Dont confuse complete with Pavelski making up for a lack of production with intangibles. Few players produce quite like him.Only Alex Ovechkin has more NHL goals over the past three seasons than Pavelskis 116. Now 32, Pavelski is perhaps no longer one of the most underappreciated players in hockey. As Tortorella puts it, Pavelski is not a flashy guy, but he does everything in the game: offensively, defensively. He does everything really well.Complete is the kind of word Pavelski wants to hear about himself because it means hes doing his job -- well, all of his jobs. He will be a top-six center for the U.S. but should also be relied on as a key piece of the power play and the penalty kill.Thats how he wants it.You want to play in all the zones. I like taking faceoffs, I like blocking a shot, forechecking, Pavelski said. And at the end of the day you want to be that guy thats scoring goals and trying to help your team.No player had more ice time or goals in last seasons playoffs than Pavelski, who averaged 20:46 per game and scored 14 times while leading the Sharks to the Stanley Cup Final. And being captain in San Jose came with its own challenges as beloved veteran Joe Thornton was demoted to an alternate but remained a big voice in the locker room.That experience showcased Pavelskis leadership, but hes no stranger to international hockey. He also played for the U.S. at the 2010 and 2014 Olympics.Former St. Louis Blues captain David Backes called Pavelski an awesome choice to fill the captains role.Hes experienced, calm, level-headed, not afraid to say something when it needs to be said, Backes said. He knows his position in the league and on this team and hes certain of that and you see that confidence in him. ... Hes going to be the guy with the `C on his sweater and lead us on the ice, off the ice with his speech, with his example what he does every single shift. From that, we expect to follow and have great success.---Follow Stephen Whyno on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/SWhyno ;Swell Bottle Cheap . Thats about all he can do right now, so hes trying not to think about when he might be able to play again for the Los Angeles Lakers. SWell Bottle Sale . After dropping their final six games of December, the Wild opened the new calendar year with four consecutive wins. Following a loss to Colorado on Saturday, Minnesota rebounded the following night to blank Nashville 4-0, but then had the tables turned on them Tuesday. http://www.swellbottlesale.com/swell-bottle-wood-sale.html .H. -- Matt Kenseth made it 2 for 2 in the Chase, holding off teammate Kyle Busch to win Sunday at New Hampshire Motor Speedway. OAKLAND, Calif. -- There was a time earlier this season when the Boston Red Sox struggled to drive in runs with two outs. Suddenly, that seems like a long time ago. Dustin Pedroia hit a tiebreaking, two-run single in the eighth inning, and the Red Sox beat the Oakland Athletics 4-2 on Friday night in a matchup between the ALs top teams. Brock Holt also drove in two runs -- and also with two outs -- in the second inning before the As rallied. Eleven of Bostons last 13 runs have come with two outs. "Theres no secret," said Pedroia, who also made a run-saving stop at second base to start a double play in the sixth. "Weve just been able to find ways to get that one pitch and make sure we dont miss it." John Lackey (7-6) overcame a season-high four walks in seven innings to carry the AL-leading Red Sox to their fourth straight victory. He allowed two runs and three hits while striking out five. He also hit a batter. Lackey improved to 19-6 against the As, even though this was far from his best performance. "This is probably one that says more about where Im at than anything," he said. "I probably didnt have my best stuff like I had my last few times out and still was able to do pretty good against a pretty good team." The As left six on base, while the Red Sox stranded five. John Jaso hit an RBI single in the fifth and Jed Lowrie added a tying home run in the sixth for Oakland, which remained a game ahead of Texas in the AL West. Sean Doolittle (3-3) allowed one hit and hit a batter before Ryan Cook gave up Pedroias two-out single. Andrew Bailey, a two-time All-Star closer for the As from 2009-2011, tossed a scoreless eighth. Koji Uehara pitched a perfect ninth for his eighth save this season. Jarrod Parker regrouped after a sloppy second inning to retire his final 16 batters and put the As in position to come back. He gave up two runs and three hits in seven innings, striking out three and walking none. "I was moving the ball in and out and being able to get some early contact. That helped me go later into the game after a long inning like that," Parker said. The only runs off Parker came in an inning that featured two errors and a hit batter that also took out plate umpire CB Bucknor and caused a brief delay. Third baseman Josh Donaldsons errant throw to first allowed Mike Napoli to advance to second. Then Parkers pitcch -- clocked at 92 mph -- grazed Daniel Nava and hit the right side of Bucknors mask. Swell Bottles On Sale. Bucknor went down on one knee and winced in pain. Second base umpire and crew chief Bill Miller replaced Bucknor behind the plate and the game resumed with three umpires. Holts two-out single gave the Red Sox a 2-0 lead. He advanced to third on the play when catcher Jaso threw the ball into right-centre field trying to nab him at second, but Parker never allowed another baserunner. The As offence finally got going when Seth Smith doubled off the wall in left leading off the fifth for the first hit against Lackey. After Coco Crisp walked, Jasos single sliced Bostons lead to 2-1. Crisp advanced to third when right fielder Shane Victorino bobbled Jasos hit. But Pedroia made a spectacular diving stop at second on Donaldsons grounder to start an inning-ending double play. "Thank God it landed in my glove, because if it didnt, it probably would have put a hole in my chest," Pedroia said of the hard-hit hopper. Lowrie sent a 1-0 cutter from Lackey over the wall in right for the tying shot in the sixth. It was Lowries seventh home run this season. Victorino was hit on the base of his right thumb by Doolittle to put runners on first and third in the seventh. After Victorino stole second uncontested, Pedroia singled to left against Cook to put Boston back in front. "Just another very go overall win on our part," Red Sox manager John Farrell said. NOTES: The Red Sox acquired reliever Matt Thornton and cash from the Chicago White Sox in exchange for minor league outfielder Brandon Jacob. ... Red Sox RHP Clay Buchholz (neck strain) threw about 30 pitches in a bullpen session Friday. The rehab assignment he had been scheduled to make Sunday will now just be another bullpen session. Farrell said Bucholz will throw a simulated game at some point and make just one rehab start instead of the two originally planned. ... Brandon Workman, who allowed three earned runs in two innings in his major league debut in Wednesdays 11-4 win at Seattle, will make his first start in Sundays series finale at Oakland, Farrell said. ... INF Adam Rosales, who the As designated for assignment Monday, cleared waivers and was assigned to Triple-A Sacramento. ... Lefty John Lester (8-5, 4.60 ERA) starts for the Red Sox against Oaklands A.J. Griffin (7-6, 3.94 ERA) on Saturday. ' ' '
Share: